<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br/> <span class="subhead">ACHILLES AND BRISEIS THE FAIRCHEEKED</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> story of Perseus belongs to the Heroic Age of Greek
history, to the time when heroes were half mortal, half
divine. Many other wonderful tales belong to the Heroic
Age, but among them all none are so famous as those that
are told in the <i>Iliad</i> and the <i>Odyssey</i>. The <i>Iliad</i> tells of
the war that raged around the walls of the city of Troy; the
<i>Odyssey</i> of the adventures of the goodly Odysseus.</p>
<p>In the north-west corner of Asia, looking toward Greece,
the ruins of an ancient city have been discovered. It was
on this spot that Troy or Ilium was believed to have stood.</p>
<p>Strange legends gathered round the warriors of the
Trojan War, so strange that some people say that there
never were such heroes as those of whom the <i>Iliad</i> tells.
However that may be, we know that in long after years,
when the Greeks fought with the people of Asia, they remembered
these old stories, and believed that they were
carrying on the wars which their fathers had begun.</p>
<p>The <i>Iliad</i> and the <i>Odyssey</i> were written by a poet named
Homer, so many wise folk tell. While others, it may be
just as wise, say that these poems were not written by one
man, but were gathered from the legends of the people, now
by one poet, now by another, until they grew into the collection
of stories which we know as the <i>Iliad</i> and the <i>Odyssey</i>.</p>
<p>At first these old stories were not written in a book; they
were sung or told in verse by the poets to the people of
Hellas. And because what is ‘simple and serious lives
longer than what is merely clever,’ these grave old stories of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
two thousand years ago are still alive, and people are still
eager to read them.</p>
<p>Some day you will read the <i>Iliad</i> and the <i>Odyssey</i>. In this
story I can only tell you about a few of the mighty warriors
who fought at Troy, about a few of their strange adventures.</p>
<p>If you look at a map of Greece you will easily find, in the
south, the country called Peloponnesus. In Peloponnesus
you will see Sparta, the capital city, over which Menelaus
was king, when the story of the <i>Iliad</i> begins.</p>
<p>Menelaus was married to a beautiful queen named Helen.
She was the fairest woman in the wide world.</p>
<p>One day there came to the court of the king a prince
named Paris. He was the second son of Priam, King of Troy.
Menelaus welcomed his royal guest and treated him with
kindness, but Paris repaid the hospitality of the king most
cruelly. For when affairs of State called Menelaus away
from Sparta for a short time, Paris did not wait until he
returned. He hastened back to Troy, taking with him the
beautiful Queen of Sparta, who was ever after known as
Helen of Troy.</p>
<p>When Menelaus came home to find that Helen had
gone away to Troy, he swore a great oath that he would
besiege the city, punish Paris, and bring back his beautiful
queen to Sparta; and this was the beginning of the Trojan
War.</p>
<p>Menelaus had not a large enough army to go alone against
his enemy. So he sent to his brother Agamemnon, who
was the chief of all the mighty warriors of Hellas, and to
many other lords, to beg them to help him to besiege Troy,
and, if it might be, to slay Paris.</p>
<p>The chiefs were eager to help Menelaus to avenge his
wrongs, and soon a great army was ready to sail across the
Hellespont to Asia, to march on Troy.</p>
<p>But before the army embarked, the warriors sent, as
was their custom, to an oracle, to ask if their expedition
would be successful.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span></p>
<p>‘Without the help of goodly Achilles, Troy will never be
taken,’ was the answer.</p>
<p>Achilles was the son of Thetis, the silver-footed goddess,
whose home was in the depths of the sea. Well did she love
her strong son Achilles. When he was a babe she wished to
guard him from the dangers that would surely threaten him
when he grew to be a man, so she took him in her arms and
carried him to the banks of the river Styx. Whoever
bathed in these magic waters became invulnerable, that is, he
became proof against every weapon. Silver-footed Thetis,
holding her precious babe firmly by one heel, plunged him
into the tide, so that his little body became at once invulnerable,
save only the heel by which his mother grasped him.
It was untouched by the magic water.</p>
<p>Achilles set sail with the other chiefs for Troy, so it
seemed as though the city would be taken by his help, as
the oracle foretold. With him Achilles took his well-loved
friend Patroclus.</p>
<p>For nine long years was the city of Troy besieged, and all
for the sake of Helen the beautiful Queen of Sparta. Often
as the years passed, she would stand upon the walls of Troy
to look at the brave warriors of Hellas, to wonder when they
would take the city. But when nine years had passed, no
breach had yet been made in the walls.</p>
<p>When the Hellenes needed food or clothing, they attacked
and plundered the neighbouring cities, which were not
so well defended as Troy.</p>
<p>The plunder of one of these cities, named Chryse, was the
cause of the fatal quarrel between Agamemnon and Achilles.</p>
<p>In Chryse there was a temple sacred to Apollo, guarded
by a priest named Chryses. His daughter Chryseis, and
another beautiful maiden named Briseis the Faircheeked,
were taken prisoners when the town was sacked by the
Hellenes. Agamemnon claimed the daughter of the priest
as his share of the spoil, while Briseis he awarded to Achilles.</p>
<div id="if_i_034" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 29em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_034.jpg" width-obs="1806" height-obs="2494" alt="" />
<div class="caption">Often she would stand upon the walls of Troy</div>
</div>
<p>When Chryses the priest found that his daughter had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
been carried away by the Greeks, he hastened to the tent of
Agamemnon, taking with him a ransom great ‘beyond
telling.’ In his hands he bore a golden staff on which he
had placed the holy garland, that the Greeks, seeing it, might
treat him with reverence.</p>
<p>‘Now may the gods that dwell in the mansions of
Olympus grant you to lay waste the city of Priam and to fare
happily homeward,’ said the priest to the assembled chiefs,
‘only set ye my dear child free and accept the ransom in
reverence to Apollo.’</p>
<p>All save Agamemnon wished to accept the ransom and
set Chryseis free, but he was wroth with the priest and
roughly bade him begone.</p>
<p>‘Let me not find thee, old man,’ he cried, ‘amid the ships,
whether tarrying now or returning again hereafter, lest the
sacred staff of the god avail thee naught. And thy daughter
will I not set free. But depart, provoke me not, that thou
mayest the rather go in peace.’</p>
<p>Then Chryseis was angry with Agamemnon, while for
his daughter’s sake he wept.</p>
<p>Down by the ‘shore of the loud-sounding sea’ he walked,
praying to Apollo, ‘Hear me, god of the silver bow. If ever
I built a temple gracious in thine eyes, or if ever I burnt to
thee fat flesh ... of bulls or goats, fulfil thou this my
desire; let the Greeks pay by thine arrows for my tears.’</p>
<p>Apollo heard the cry of the priest, and swift was his
answer. For he hastened to the tents of the Greeks, bearing
upon his shoulders his silver bow, and he sped arrows of
death into the camp.</p>
<p>Dogs, mules, men, all fell before the arrows of the angry
god. The bodies of the dead were burned on great piles of
wood, and the smoke rose black toward the sky.</p>
<p>For nine days the clanging of the silver bow was heard.
Then Achilles called the hosts of the Greeks together, and
before them all he spoke thus to Agamemnon: ‘Let us go
home, Son of Atreus,’ he said, ‘rather than perish, as we surely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
shall do if we remain here. Else let us ask a priest why
Apollo treats us thus harshly.’</p>
<p>But it was easy to tell why Apollo was angry, and
Calchas, a seer, answered Achilles in plain-spoken words.
‘The wrath of the god is upon us,’ he said, ‘for the sake of
the priest whom Agamemnon spurned, refusing to accept
the ransom of his daughter. Let Chryseis be sent back to
her father, and for sacrifice also a hundred beasts, that the
anger of the god may be pacified.’</p>
<p>Deep was the wrath of Agamemnon as he listened to the
words of Calchas.</p>
<p>‘Thou seer of evil,’ he cried, his eyes aflame with anger,
‘never yet hast thou told me the thing that is pleasant.
Yet that the hosts of our army perish not, I will send the
maiden back. But in her place will I take Briseis the Fair-cheeked,
whom Achilles has in his tent.’</p>
<p>When Achilles heard these words he drew his sword to
slay Agamemnon. But before he could strike a blow he
felt the locks of his golden hair caught in a strong grasp, and
in a moment his rage was checked, for he knew the touch was
that of the goddess Athene. None saw her save Achilles,
none heard as she said to him, ‘I came from heaven to stay
thine anger.... Go to now, cease from strife, and let not
thine hand draw the sword.’</p>
<p>Then Achilles sheathed his sword, saying, ‘Goddess,
needs must a man observe thy saying even though he be
very wroth at heart, for so is the better way.’</p>
<p>Yet although Achilles struck no blow, bitter were the
words he spoke to the king, for a coward did he deem him
and full of greed. ‘If thou takest from me Briseis,’ he cried,
‘verily, by my staff, that shall not blossom again seeing it
has been cleft from a tree, never will I again draw sword for
thee. Surely I and my warriors will go home, for no quarrel
have we with the Trojans. And when Hector slaughters
thy hosts, in vain shalt thou call for Achilles.’</p>
<p>Well did Agamemnon know that he ought to soothe the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
anger of Achilles and prevail on him to stay, for his presence
alone could make the Trojans fear. Yet in his pride the king
answered, ‘Thou mayest go and thy warriors with thee.
Chieftains have I who will serve me as well as thou, and who
will pay me more respect than ever thou hast done. As for
the maiden Briseis, her I will have, that the Greeks may know
that I am indeed the true sovereign of this host.’</p>
<p>The Assembly then broke up, and Chryseis was sent home
under the charge of Odysseus, one of the bravest of the
Greek warriors.</p>
<p>When the priest received his daughter again, he at once
entreated Apollo to stay his fatal darts, that the Greeks
might no longer perish in their camp. And Apollo heard
and laid aside his silver bow and his arrows of death.</p>
<p>Then Agamemnon called heralds, and bade them go to
the tent of Achilles and bring to him Briseis of the fair
cheeks. ‘Should Achilles refuse to give her up,’ said the
angry king, ‘let him know that I myself will come to fetch
the maiden.’</p>
<p>But when the heralds told Achilles the words of the king,
he bade Patroclus bring the damsel from her tent and give
her to the messengers of Agamemnon. And the maiden,
who would fain have stayed with Achilles, was taken to the
king.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />